I come across many questions on SO like this one where the user is very new to programming, still needs to learn several foundational concepts, and is likely doing homework or some kind of personal practice problem. This typically leads to the following problematic behaviour from other users:
- Downvotes if the user doesn't seem to have made enough effort to solve the problem. Some users don't seem to understand that a beginner may be at a complete loss at how to even start tackling a problem.
- Answers that completely solve the problem and prevent the asker from learning how to solve a problem themselves, possibly doing their homework for them.
- Answers or comments involving very high-level concepts or functions that the asker probably won't understand, where the asker probably needs to use much simpler concepts so that they can build a proper foundation for their programming knowledge. For example an answer in the linked question uses Python's extremely high-level and specific
maketrans
andtranslate
functions for strings. Meanwhile the user just needs to write a couple offor
loops and maybe use a dictionary or.index
, and really needs to learn how to do so.
Personally when I see questions like this I want to guide the user step by step towards solving the problem themselves to give them a more useful learning experience. I don't think I'm the only one who feels this way. But inevitably some users will do the above. In particular, when a user answers the question with a complete solution, the asker will no longer care about replying to my comments and learning. Their homework is done.
What can we do about this?
- Is it acceptable to downvote or flag answers that essentially do the asker's homework for them? I'm guessing the answer is "no".
- Can we close/flag questions as homework? Once a question is closed then no one can answer it and thus the user is forced to solve their problem more gradually. I've seen other meta questions covering this topic and the answers are essentially "no, the existing close reasons are good enough". I'm not quite convinced by this. Taking the linked question as an example: the user has provided some code and mentioned searching for other questions, which seems to have satisfied viewers and prevented any close votes. But the code doesn't actually relate to the problem the user has, it's just a user interface.
- Can we have a site for beginners and homework? Again I can see that this has been discussed repeatedly here, but I'm not satisfied with the other questions and answers. In particular I'm not suggesting a split based on reputation, and I'm not expecting only beginners to be on the site. I'm thinking of a site where beginners ask questions and experts answer them step by step, not spoonfeeding the asker. Behaviour like the above would be discouraged, and questions that would be downvoted or closed here might be handled more gracefully there. Homework questions on SO could be migrated. I understand that this requires more patience and there would probably be fewer volunteers, but I think it's worth a try.